by Jerome
R. Corsi
Nov 03, 2006
In Texas, the Trans-Texas
Corridor (TTC-35) has become a major
issue in the gubernatorial campaign where incumbent Republican
Gov. Rick
Perry is viewed as a chief proponent for
building this new, giant toll road parallel to Interstate-35.
This year, three major candidates are contesting Perry: Democrat
candidate Chris
Bell, Republican-turned-independent
Comptroller Carole
Keaton Strayhorn, and independent Kinky
Friedman. Moving outside traditional
party lines, the typically colorful Strayhorn presents herself as
“One Tough Grandma.” Strayhorn’s children include Scott
McClellan, the former press secretary to President Bush. Kinky
Friedman, who aspires to be the Lone Star state’s first Jewish
governor, is a 61-year-old country-and-western
troubadour who is known by his trademark
cowboy hat, mustache with limited goatee, and ever-present cigar.
All three contenders have slammed Perry for advancing TTC-35, a
new toll road to be built four football fields wide from Laredo on
the Mexican border to the Texas-Oklahoma border south of Oklahoma
City. As disclosed by the Texas
Department of Transportation, this road,
characterized by this author as a “NAFTA
Super Highway,” will be financed by Cintra
Concesiones de Infraestructuras de Transport,
a Spanish investment consortium with ties to Juan Carlos and the
ruling family of Spain, and built by San Antonio-based Zachry
Construction Co. I have previously
documented the extensive campaign
contributions made by Cintra-Zachry to the Perry campaign.
Incumbent Under Attack
Each of Perry’s contenders is attacking him (as well as each
other), campaigning on a platform opposing TTC-35 construction.
Democrat Bell notes that in 2001 as comptroller, Strayhorn
recommended that Texas build new toll roads. Bell’s campaign
website rails against TTC-35, noting that the road would
“destroy almost 1.5 million acres of prime farmland and strip
Texas landowners of over 150 square miles of privately owned
property.” Bell’s argument
strongly suggests graft:
The Trans Texas Corridor is a case study in
corruption and cronyism, and one of my first acts as governor
would be slamming the brakes on the whole plan and dragging it
back into the public light.
Strayhorn’s website
is equally emphatic that TTC-35 is a politician’s dream and a
citizen’s nightmare:
In this election, there are two sides and one
choice – the Austin political establishment and its
land-grabbing, secret, foreign-owned tolls versus the people and
their desire for freeways. I stand with the people. I will shake
Austin up.
A video
clip of Strayhorn speaking at a vocal
rally opposing TTC-35 can be viewed on the Internet. Here
Strayhorn connected TTC-35 to NAFTA by claiming Perry’s
super-highway plan amounted to turning “Texas DOT into
Euro-DOT.” In her speech to the rally, she also renamed the
“Trans Texas Corridor” as “Trans Texas Catastrophe.”
Strayhorn called for putting TTC-35 to a referendum, which
prompted participants at the rally begin chanting, “Let the
People Vote!”
Friedman’s campaign website
joins the anti-TTC chorus:
Kinky is opposed to the Trans-Texas Corridor
since it relies on toll road construction. He feels that the TTC
is a land grab of the ugliest kind, with land being taken from
hard-working ranchers and farmers in little towns and villages
all over Texas. The people who will ultimately own that land are
the same people who own the governor.
Typically, Perry’s campaign website
defends TTC-35 as business as normal, just another highway needed
to accommodate the state’s growing population and burgeoning
economy:
Texas’ rapid population and commerce growth
has strained our highway and rail systems to their limit. Rather
than taking decades to expand these important corridors a little
bit at a time, Governor Perry developed the Trans Texas Corridor
plan. The Corridor plan allows the state to build needed
corridors much more quickly and without a tax increase.
This past summer, the Texas Department of
Transportation (TxDOT) held a series of final public
hearings proposing the final route
choices for TTC-35. Thousands of Texas residents showed
up at these hearings to protest TTC-35,
not realizing that the only question at issue was the specific
route, not whether the super highway would be built. TxDOT has
proceeded with a resolve to begin construction in 2007, as if
TTC-35 were a “done deal,” regardless how much public outcry
is heard in opposition. Ironically, since the Texas gubernatorial
race is a plurality contest, Perry could win even if a majority of
the votes go to a combination of his three opposition candidates.
Thus, unless Texas voters opposed to TTC-35 are able to focus on
one opposition candidate, Perry could win even if his TTC-35 plan
is opposed by a majority of Texas voters.
Sal
Costello, founder of the TexasTollParty.com
and vocal opponent of TTC-35, has led the Internet charge against
the proposed super highway. The TexasTollParty.com has produced
two television commercials supporting the group’s endorsement of
Strayhorn in the governor’s race. One commercial
proclaims, “If you liked the Dubai Ports deal, you will love the
TTC land grab,” while the other
presents a cartoon figure of Perry who announces, “You will love
my TTC land grab. It turns your property into foreign profits.”
The ads have been aired thanks to People
for Efficient Transportation PAC, a
group which Costello also founded .
David Stall, another opponent of TTC-35, has created CorridorWatch.org,
a website dedicated to disclosing information that TxDOT has not
fully disclosed, including arguments contesting the ability of
TxDOT to utilize
eminent domain under the recent Supreme
Court case Kelo
v. City of New London to grab more than
half a million acres of Texas private property and displace up to
1 million Texans from their homes, businesses, ranches, and farms
in the process of building out the full 4,000-mile TTC network
planned to crisscross the landscape throughout Texas.
A documentary opposing TTC-35, titled “Truth
Be Tolled,” was premiered at the Austin
Film Festival on October 26. Austin
talk-radio host Alex Jones, an outspoken opponent of TTC-35, has
archived videos of his in-studio radio interviews with both Sal
Costello and David
Stall.
A group of citizens in central Texas have formed an organization
known as the Blackland
Coalition, which has also created a PAC
that is running newspaper
ads in Texas opposing TTC-35.
Bloggers Ask Questions
While the mainstream media have largely ignored the issue super
highway toll roads, bloggers
in Texas have even picked up an issue HUMAN EVENTS first
developed, namely that trade
organizations such as North
America’s SuperCorridor Coalition (NASCO)
have been supporting NAFTA super highways through endorsing the
activity of their members, including TxDOT.
In an interview with the author, Todd Spencer, the executive vice
president of the 145,000 member Owner-Operator
Independent Drivers Association, openly
opposes TTC-35 on behalf of the group’s 145,000 members who
operate more than 240,000 individual heavy-duty tucks and small
truck fleets throughout the U.S. and Canada. Spencer argues that
the real purpose of the TTC-35 project is to open Mexican ports,
such as Lázaro Cárdenas, so Mexican trucks can transport Chinese
under-market goods into the U.S. at a reduced transportation cost.
“We are also concerned about security. There’s no reason to
think that just because there’s a Mexican customs office in
Kansas City that all Mexican drivers on the Trans Texas Corridor
will stay on the route. The Mexican trucks will get off the TTC
and go lots of other places and there won’t be anything
meaningful to stop them.”
Spencer fully expects TxDOT to make the TTC-35 toll road
attractive by setting high speed limits, in the range of 75 to 80
miles per hour. Noting that TxDOT is planning on charging up to 40
cents per mile as a toll for trucks, Spencer commented that this
was equivalent to charging an extra $2.40 a gallon in additional
fuel taxes.
“Once the TTC is built,” Mr. Spencer commented, “TxDOT will
attempt to force people to use the toll road.” How?
“Simple,” Spencer responded, “just watch, once TTC-35 is
completed, TxDOT will begin maintaining I-35 a lot less. You can
count on Cintra to enforce a ‘no-compete clause’ that is
designed to prevent TxDOT from building an alternative road or
even improving I-35.”
Congress Gets Involved
Just this week, Rep. Ron Paul (R.-Tex.) entered the TTC-35 debate,
writing in his weekly
column to express his opposition to the
super highway. Paul expressed constitutional concerns over TTC-35:
By now many Texans have heard about the
proposed “NAFTA Superhighway,” which is also referred to as
the trans-Texas corridor. What you may not know is the extent to
which plans for such a superhighway are moving forward without
congressional oversight or media attention.
Paul has decided to co-sponsor H.C. Res. 487,
introduced in the House by Rep. Virgil Goode (R.-Va.) on September
28. The resolution is co-sponsored by Representatives Tom Tancredo
(R.-Colo.) and Walter Jones (R.-N.C.). It asks the House to not
engage in the construction of NAFTA super-highways and to oppose
entering into a European Union-style North American Union (NAU)
with Mexico and Canada.
At a National Press Club news
conference held in Washington, D.C., on
October 25, I joined in forming a coalition co-sponsored by Howard
Phillips, chairman of the Conservative Caucus, and Phyllis
Schlafly, president of Eagle Forum, to support the House
resolution. An online
petition is available for readers to
sign to indicate their support of this coalition in the battle to
secure America’s borders.
Mr. Corsi is the author of several books,
including "Unfit
for Command: Swift Boat Veterans Speak Out Against John
Kerry" (along with John O'Neill), "Black
Gold Stranglehold: The Myth of Scarcity and the Politics of
Oil" (along with Craig R. Smith), and "Atomic
Iran: How the Terrorist Regime Bought the Bomb and American
Politicians," and most recently, "Minutemen:
The Battle to Secure America's Borders."
He is a frequent guest on the G.
Gordon Liddy radio show. He will soon
co-author a new book with Jim Gilchrist on the Minuteman Project.